• SPEA logo

    Student Professionalism & Ethics Association in Dentistry recognized with "Best Fight Against COVID Award"

    Oct 25, 2020
    The Student Professionalism & Ethics Association in Dentistry (SPEA) recognized the University of Colorado School of Dental Medicine with it's 2020 Chapter Award for "Best Fight Against COVID."
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  • Atlantic illustration

    What the Chaos in Hospitals Is Doing to Doctors

    Dec 9, 2020
    THE ATLANTIC: A system of care that privileges only survival odds reinforces existing injustices. “Equity still matters,” even in a crisis situation, Center Director Matthew Wynia said. “Justice matters. Fairness still matters. You’re not just trying to optimize a number.”
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  • 9News Vaccine

    Limited vaccine distribution brings up bioethical questions

    Dec 7, 2020
    9NEWS: Center Director Matthew Wynia, MD, MPH discusses the emerging ethical issues around vaccine allocation in Colorado with 9News reporter Tom Green. View interview>>
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  • Jackie Glover

    Jackie Glover, PhD elected as Hastings Center Fellow

    Dec 4, 2020
    Hastings Center Fellows are academic bioethicists, scholars from other disciplines, scientists, journalists, lawyers, novelists, artists or highly accomplished persons from other spheres. Their common distinguishing feature is uncommon insight and impact in areas of critical concern to the Center – how best to understand and manage the inevitable values questions, moral uncertainties and societal effects that arise as a consequence of advances in the life sciences, the need to improve health and health care for people of all ages, and mitigation of human impact on the natural world.
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  • CU Anschutz 360

    COVID-19 Has Moved Bioethics From the Classroom Into Everyday Life

    Nov 24, 2020
    CU ANSCHUTZ 360 PODCAST: Matthew Wynia, MD, MPH reflects on what he’s learned over the course of the pandemic — moments of optimism and profound disappointment. “Back in February, we had a meeting…on public health preparedness for medical and public health disasters. And we all sort of assumed that there would be a whole of government approach and that the nation would pull together around this, just like we do in wartime. Just like we do after a tsunami, just like we do after a hurricane, we all pull together. And the fact that that hasn't happened is just tragic. It's just tragic.”
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  • Dorian Thompson-Robinson

    Too close for comfort? Why contact tracing sidelined UCLA QB but not his roommate

    Nov 23, 2020
    LA TIMES: UCLA is not among the teams that have enhanced their contact tracing efforts through cellphone apps or wearable devices that track player movement. Christine Baugh, PhD, MPH, said electronic monitoring offers its own ethical dilemmas regarding privacy.
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  • Fat Studies masthead

    Fighting for a (wide enough) seat at the table: weight stigma in law and policy

    Nov 9, 2020
    FAT STUDIES: Daniel Goldberg, JD, PhD collaborated with researchers from the UK, Iceland, and the US on this research article. The authors conclude, "As awareness of the inherent injustice and harmful nature of weight stigma reaches critical mass, the perceived political costs and obstacles may amend themselves toward legal reform."
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  • Bioethics for the People logo

    Bioethics in a Pandemic

    Oct 7, 2020
    BIOETHICS FOR THE PEOPLE PODCAST: Center Director Matthew Wynia, MD, MPH discussed a range of topics from equity issues to research prioritization and the intertwining of bioethics and humanities. "In the real world of medical practice, of public health practice, of research... the things where we see ethical issues arise; once you get to actual implementation of your careful ethical analysis, it's humanities work."
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  • Zach Budlong

    Uncounted: San Diego County’s pandemic victims far surpass official totals

    Oct 21, 2020
    INEWSOURCE: Center Director Matthew Wynia said the official count kept by the public health office is important, but it “leads us to underestimate the total impact of certain types of disasters.” In September, Wynia and a team of researchers published a national report that Congress commissioned on how to measure a disaster’s death toll. “You can use that information to target resources to neighborhoods that are being very hard hit or other social groups that may be particularly hard hit. When we can figure out why people die, we can maybe intervene to prevent those deaths.”
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  • ICU Medical Center of Aurora

    Deaths in Colorado rose 20% during first 6 months of pandemic, reflecting COVID-19’s broader toll on health

    Oct 11, 2020
    GREELEY TRIBUNE: COVID-19 is now state’s fourth leading cause of death, but fatalities caused by ODs, heart disease and more also rose. “The pandemic has affected every aspect of our lives, including every aspect of our health care and our health,” said Center Director, Matthew Wynia, MD, MPH.
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  • Vials of blood

    Canada’s COVID-19 Vaccine Task Force needs better transparency about potential conflicts of interest

    Oct 10, 2020
    ​PHILIPPINE/CANADIAN INQUIRER: In June, the National Research Council set up an 18-member COVID-19 Vaccine Task Force charged with prioritizing vaccine projects and securing commercially available vaccines in Canada. The government declared that it was a “deliberate decision … to include individuals who may have a real or perceived … conflict of interest with respect to one or more proposals to be evaluated by the … task force.” The authors, including Lisa Bero, PhD, find that with Canadian lives on the line, trust has already been jeopardized, and trust in decisions about vaccines is going to be crucial. Both transparency and independence are needed, and task force chairs and most members should not have conflicts.
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  • The President's doctors at Walter Reed

    Confusion about Trump’s COVID-19 infection fits a long pattern of skimpy details about presidential health

    Oct 3, 2020
    BOSTON GLOBE: Dr. Matthew Wynia said he worried the public was hearing “contradictory statements” that make “things even more uncertain than they need to be.” He called the information provided about the president’s health “confusing" and said it "suggests that he might be sicker than we’re being told — and that he might have been sick for longer than we’ve been told.”
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  • AJPH Nov 2020 cover

    Improving the Quality of Systematic Reviews in Public Health: Introduction to the Series

    Oct 8, 2020
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH: The pandemic has stimulated public health research across the spectrum of prevention, detection, treatment, and recovery. Lisa Bero, PhD is launching a series of methods articles aimed at improving the relevance and rigor of systematic reviews on public health topics. Using case studies from the Cochrane Collaboration, the articles illustrate innovative methods to involve stakeholders, frame questions, and design evidence syntheses
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  • Bill Gates

    While the Poor Get Sick, Bill Gates Just Gets Richer

    Oct 5, 2020
    THE NATION: The billionaire’s pandemic investments, like much of his work, remain a secret. Lisa Bero, PhD said authors need to provide details of their financial conflicts of interest, even if it means listing dozens of companies—which is not unheard of among authors in the New England Journal of Medicine.
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  • Trump mocking masks

    Editors of the New England Journal of Medicine say the Trump administration “took a crisis and turned it into a tragedy.”

    Oct 7, 2020
    NEW YORK TIMES: Throughout its 208-year history, the Journal has remained staunchly nonpartisan, until now. "Wow!," said Center Director Matthew Wynia, noting that the editorial which was signed by all 34 editors did not explicitly mention Mr. Biden, but it was clearly “an obvious call to replace the president.”
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  • restraint

    Balancing Restraint and Safety in the ED

    Oct 1, 2020
    EMERGENCY MEDICINE NEWS: "There are things you could probably do to create a space designed for individuals showing up with psychiatric crisis, in the same way we clearly have specific spaces for trauma," commented Matthew Wynia, MD, MPH.
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  • Kevin McCarthy and Lauren Boebert

    Health Expert Says Boebert Campaign “Stoking Mistrust” of “Heroes” Who Work in Public Health

    Sep 29, 2020
    COLORADO TIMES RECORDER: Multiple events by 3rd Congressional District candidate Lauren Boebert have violated statewide public health recommendations on social distancing. “What’s she’s saying is, I’m a libertarian. Freedom is very important, and the government shouldn’t force us to do things for our own good. You can take every risk you want, but you’re not taking a risk when you are not wearing a mask, you are imposing a risk on others,” explained Center Director Matthew Wynia, MD, MPH.
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  • Warren  Binford

    Warren Binford honored with Justice Hans A. Linde Award

    Sep 16, 2020
    Visiting Clinical Professor Warren Binford, JD, Ed.M, was recognized with the Justice Hans A. Linde Award by the Oregon chapter of the American Constitution Society, at a virtual award ceremony hosted by Willamette University on September 16th. Binford is an internationally recognized children’s rights scholar and advocate who is a frequent writer and speaker on a variety of children’s issues, including 21st century forms of child abuse, exploitation, and neglect.
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  • JAMA

    Ensuring Adequate Palliative and Hospice Care During COVID-19 Surges

    Sep 21, 2020
    JAMA Viewpoint: Authors Jean Abbott, Daniel Johnson and Matthew Wynia conclude that an ethical approach to pandemic surge planning requires recognizing and addressing threats of scarcity throughout the community. Failure to plan for adequate palliative and hospice care when a substantial increase in disease and death is expected is unconscionable, and it risks undermining patient-family trust, long-term emotional health, and the core values of society.
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  • Hand with pulse oximeter

    Ethical Considerations In The Use Of AI Mortality Predictions In The Care Of People With Serious Illness

    Sep 16, 2020
    HEALTH AFFAIRS: Predicting prognosis is as old as medicine itself. Recent breakthroughs in artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning have led to algorithms that promise to answer one of life’s ultimate questions: When will I die? Co-author Matthew DeCamp, MD, PhD concludes that aligning care with patient priorities and avoiding biases should be the explicit aims of such work.
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